Transcript: Mayor de Blasio Holds Media Availability at Bronxworks Morris Innovative Senior Center

July 7, 2016Mayor Bill de Blasio: We want to update everyone on the weather conditions  we’re facing. I just got to spend some time with the seniors here at this  wonderful center and really wanted to let them know directly that it is so  important to take precautions when we have this kind of weather. And I have to  say, the seniors were very aware of the dangers and I think they took to heart  the warnings we were giving them about how important it is to really take this  weather seriously and make sure to take the proper precautions. So, we  recognize it is not only very hot weather, but it is potentially dangerous  weather we are experiencing today and tomorrow.I’m going to give you an  update on the forecast and on the steps the City is taking and on the kinds of  precautions we want to urge all New Yorkers to take, but first let me  acknowledge and thank – and you’re going to hear from some of these folks – our  OEM Commissioner Joe Esposito, our Health Commissioner Dr. Mary Bassett, our  Fire Commissioner Dan Nigro, our Social Services Commissioner Steve Banks, the  General Manager at of NYCHA Michael Kelly, the Deputy Commissioner for External  Affairs at Department for the Aging Karen Resnick, and I want to thank the elected  officials who have joined with us and are working with us to get the word out  to all their constituents, but particularly the seniors. Senator Gustavo  Rivera, Assemblyman Victor Pichardo – we had Councilman Fernando Cabrera  upstairs. I know he had to leave. I also want to thank Carlos Torres the Vice  President for Emergency Management at Con Ed. And obviously we’ll be working  very closely with Con Ed in these next few days.And one of the things we’re  going to talk about is the things we have to do to help make sure that we   don’t have power outages. Every New Yorker can be part of not only staying  safe, but also making sure this whole City doesn’t deal with power outages. So,  let me go over first of all, the forecast as we know it. Today, the temperature  will climb to around 90 with heat index values in the mid-90s. And that will  continue up until about 8 pm today. Tomorrow, we expect temperatures up to 93  degrees. The National Weather Service has issued a heat advisory. That heat  advisory will go until 7 pm tomorrow. And we have an air quality alert. It is  in effect today until 11 pm, so obviously these kinds of heat conditions also  affect the quality of the air and that’s a real concern for seniors and folks  with respiratory diseases.Homeless services –  Department of Homeless Services has issued a Code Red. That means that we’re  doing outreach to homeless folks. We obviously have much more ability to locate  folks who are on the street because of our HOME-STAT program. We’re doing  specific outreach to get them to places where they are cool – can be cool and  to get them the help they need in this environment. Now, I want to talk very  quickly about six things that all New Yorkers should be aware of and six  important precautions and steps you can take in this kind of situation. First  of all, stay indoors and out of the sun. If you have the opportunity – you  don’t have to because of work or travel – be outside a lot, it’s a really good  day to stay indoors, not be over exposed to this heat and this sunlight.We want to make sure that for  those who are out that they know the City is doing a number of things to give  you some opportunities to stay cool.  On the playgrounds, we’re going to  be keeping sprinklers on until dark. And at our larger pools, we will be  extending hours until 8 pm. So, for folks who are out or folks who want to  experience the sprinklers or the pools they are going to be open later. It is  also a classic New York City tradition to open up fire hydrants. That’s not  necessarily a bad thing, but it has to be done the right way – with the advice  and the support of the Fire Department. That means getting the right kind of  spray cap and I’m sure Commissioner Nigro will talk about how to do that.  Second, use air conditioning – the most fundamental notion, make sure if you  have air conditioning you’re using it to stay cool. Now, some people don’t use  a lot of air conditioning. This is a day to be aware that it is necessary, but  we’re also going to say as we said in past years, use it, but don’t over use  it. Don’t set it too low. So, we’re urging everyone to set air conditioners to  78 degrees. This gives the benefit of keeping people cool enough, but doesn’t  over tax our electricity grid. And again, that is a big concern in weather like  this.If you don’t have air  conditioning there are places you can go. This senior center is an example –  there are 500 centers around the City – libraries, community centers, senior  centers, recreation facilities all available for free all over the city – every  neighborhood. Anyone who wants to find out where the closest cooling center is,  all they have to do is pick up the phone and call 3-1-1 and we will have them  open today and tomorrow.Third, and this is something  our mothers always told us when we were kids, drink lots of water and this is  one of the most fundamental things. And I urge all New Yorkers drink water  whether you feel thirsty or not, just keep drinking water throughout the day,  it is one of the most important ways to keep the body cool and healthy.Fourth, check on your  neighbors. Any seniors in your building, any friends, anyone you know might be  frail or particularly vulnerable at this moment it is really important to check  in on them and see if they need help. Make sure they are drinking water – make  sure that they have the air conditioning on.Fifth, if you’re feeling  symptoms that might indicate something dangerous call 9-1-1. As we always say,  if you’re just seeking information call 3-1-1, but a lot of times we find – and  Dr. Bassett I’m sure will speak to this – the heat sneaks up on people and  someone’s having trouble breathing or their heartbeat’s going up or they feel  dizzy or they feel nausea and they kind of explain it away rather than  recognizing it could be a sign of a very dangerous situation. Anyone who feels  those symptoms coming on and feels in danger should call 9-1-1. And we are  particularly concerned about seniors who have chronic medical conditions that  they take extra precautions.And finally, six, don’t  forget the pets in our lives. Keep our pets safe too in this moment. Pets need  to also be hydrated. They need to be in a cool place. Of course, don’t leave  pets in a parked car in this kind of heat it could be very, very dangerous. And  all of these things people need instruction, if they need information they can  call 3-1-1 or go to NYC.gov for further information. Also, on the weather we  have another related situation. There is a potential for thunderstorms this  afternoon. That might provide some temporary cooling, but we are also concerned  it could lead to a lot of rain coming down very, very quickly. So – possibility  here of one to two inches very fast rain coming down. This could lead to flash  flooding in some parts of the City. So, we want in particular drivers to be  aware that later on today the conditions may be dangerous and take precautions  and be careful on the roadways.Just a couple words in  Spanish before turning to our colleagues.[Mayor de Blasio speaks in  Spanish]With that, I want to turn to  our OEM Commissioner Joe Esposito. And we thank him for all that he is doing  and his team is doing to help us deal with this situation.Commissioner Joe Esposito,  Office of Emergency Management: New  York City Emergency Management, we’re working very closely with our city  partner agencies to keep New York City safe during the heat emergency. We’re  also working very closely with the National Weather Service. We were on a  conference call just about an hour ago. We stay in constant contact with them  to get the latest, as the mayor gave you the degrees and the alerts that are in  effect. In addition to the heat and air quality alert, we also have the flash  flood watch in effect as the mayor alluded to. That’s between noon and six. We may  get some flash flooding through the thunderstorms. That’s in low lying areas,  not your typical coastal areas. This is the areas that experience flooding when  you get a lot of rain in a short period of time. Those are the areas we’re  talking about. We’ve spoken with DEP and Sanitation to go out there and do some  pre-emptive work to clean those catch basins to hopefully alleviate that  situation to some degree. Because of the moisture in the atmosphere, that  thunderstorm could develop very quickly and drop one to two inches. If it  starts raining try to get yourself indoors. You don’t want to be in that  situation.We ask you to follow us on  Notify NYC. It’s a program we run out of the NYC Emergency Management. It’s  where you get the latest information on all types of events throughout the  city. I encourage everybody to sign up for that. We have over 400,000  participants right now. We want to get that to even higher. You can sign up for  that by going to nyc.gov and you can link right over to that.Also we’re in constant  contact with ConEd. Carlos Torres, who as the mayor said, is the Vice President  for Emergency Management for them. He’s sitting next to me. Again, this is a  time of weather where you can get very stressed – the system gets very  stressed. Right now we have about 150 customers that are out, most of them are  in the Astoria or Long Island City area of Queens. We expect it to be back  within a few hours. We’re in constant contact with ConEd and PSEG. The staff –  we also have the staff member from my shop that’s embedded in ConEd to make  sure we get the latest information in a very timely fashion. We have a city  heat emergency plan in effect. It’ll stay in effect until the heat emergency is  over. We anticipate that to be around 7 or 8 o’clock tomorrow night. We also  use our advance warning system. It’s a system where messages go out through  healthcare providers and other agencies and other folks who deal with special  needs populations. It’s our way of getting information to them in a timely  fashion, so they can better serve their clients, especially the homebound and  people with medical needs. We use the advanced warnings system for that. ConEd  and PSEG have asked us to issue an excavation safety alert. What that does is  it alerts contractors who are doing work around the city to be extra cautious  when drilling and digging in the streets. The last thing you want to do right  now is to sever a power line and cause a blackout in this type of weather  condition. We have that alert out also.We’re in the middle of a  three day heat wave. We want to make sure you stay safe by using the air  conditioner as the mayor said – 78, not lower than that, visiting one of our  cooling centers. We have 500 city-wide that will stay open through most of the  day. Visit the pools, the beaches, and don’t forget the check on your neighbors  and anybody who is vulnerable. Check on your neighbors, it’s very important.Mayor: Thank you very much, Joe. Now to talk to us about the  real health dangers that exists in this kind of situation, our Health  Commissioner, Dr. Mary Bassett.Commissioner Mary Bassett,  Department of Health and Mental Hygiene: Thank you, Mr. Mayor. The mayor and Commissioner Esposito have really covered  what we need to do to stay safe during these heat emergencies. The Health  Department’s role during this time is to echo the words that you should stay  cool, stay hydrated, and check on your neighbors. We have a particular role in  monitoring emergency department visits and EMS calls, and we also send out  alerts to healthcare providers across the city, which we’ve done – alerting  them to be aware of the needs of their patients and to look for heat related  illnesses in their practices.It’s very important to  remember that heat is not just unpleasant – that it can be a serious and deadly  exposure. For many people, the worst risk is in their own home. Eighty percent  or more of heat related deaths that we see every year in New York City, and we  see about 120 of them, are people who are exposed to heat at home. That’s why it’s  so important for people to understand that they should try to get to  air-conditioned places, and if they can’t, take other measures to stay cool –  such as, sponge baths or taking a lukewarm shower. And that’s why it’s so  important that we check on our neighbors to make sure that we identify anyone  who’s getting into trouble.Let me go over the clinical  symptoms that you should look for, that you may recognize in another person, so  you know when you should call 9-1-1. They are being either hot and dry – which  means the person has exhausted their ability to sweat – or being cold and  clammy. People who have become confused or disoriented, having nausea,  vomiting, trouble breathing, fast heart rate, weakness and dizziness. These are  all symptoms of heat exhaustion and heat stroke, and you should call 9-1-1 and  get that person in for prompt medical attention and cooling. Every year we  experience about 120 excess deaths due to heat waves, and in recent days – in  recent years, we’ve seen this increase by about ten percent. We also see an  increase in emergency department visits and heat related hospitalizations, so  that’s just again to say – drink water, the best beverage during hot weather,  our own New York City water is the best possible beverage. Stay away from  alcohol and caffeine drinks. Identify a place where you can go get cool, check  on your neighbors.Mayor: Thank you very, very much. Now I want to hear from  our Fire Commissioner Dan Nigro. And Dan, certainly tell people the right way  to handle the hydrants in particular.Fire Commissioner Daniel  Nigro: Sure, we’re always worried  about water pressure here when you have a heat wave, so spray caps are  available in every fire house. Any adult can come and ask for one and receive  one. We’re happy to give them out and happy to see kids playing with spray  caps, certainly not with hydrants at full force. Extraordinary weather  conditions certainly make the difficult job that the members of the Fire  Department do all that much more difficult. Some of the advice you hear – wear  light clothing, avoid strenuous exercise – we can’t do that. The job is  strenuous, and the job entails wearing heavy clothing. It’s a very difficult  job. This morning we had a multiple alarm on West 42nd street in a 60-story  building. Members operated safely in that building. We had one member  hospitalized who’s already out of the hospital, and four civilians with minor  injuries. I think it’s a tribute to members operating [inaudible] and  efficiently in this kind of weather. We had about a three percent increase in  calls yesterday in the heat, which is probably a tribute to people heeding the  mayor’s advice and not overwhelming themselves with these conditions. We  staffed up again today with our ambulances to be ready for the calls. We know it  will go up slightly, so there are additional ambulances on the street and we  are prepared to meet this heat wave.Mayor: Thank you very much, thank you to all the men and  woman of the FDNY for all you’re doing, and I think to Dr. Bassett’s point too  – it really emphasizes if someone is showing those symptoms, we want people to  be better safe than sorry and call 9-1-1 and get help immediately. Finally I  want you to hear from Steve Banks, related to everything we’re trying to do  help homeless on the streets and all the work that his agency is doing.Commissioner Steve Banks,  Human Resources Administration: Thank  you very much. Two quick areas that we’ve been very focused on in this kind of  weather. One is in terms of our homeless outreach effort who are nonprofit  partners. We have 150 outreach workers out on the street per shift, and they’re  making multiple passes very much focused on the most vulnerable people that we  have identified as being on the street. Through the HOME-STAT effort we’ve been  building a caseload of people, and we’re going to address the people we know to  be in the most vulnerable situation, offering them help, and bringing them in.  We’ve already had some success over the last most recent 12-hour shift recent  from midnight to 8 AM. We encourage people to call 3-1-1, so that we can deploy  our outreach teams to people we may not have identified previously, so that we  can provide that kind of help. In terms of our HRA services, we’ve identified  on an ongoing basis our most vulnerable clients, those who are living without  support, our clients in the adult protective services agency, HASA clients with  AIDS, homebound clients, and we’re working with our contractors to reach out to  them to make sure they are heeding the kinds of advice that Dr. Bassett has  provided and that we can be in touch with them and provide them assistance  during this heat wave.Mayor: Thank you very much. Let’s take questions on the  weather situation. Anything about the precautions we’re taking? Then I want to  talk about another matter and then we’ll go to off-topic questions as well.  Yes?Question: Commissioner Banks, you mentioned that you brought a  number of people in last night. Do you have that number by any chance?Commissioner Banks: During that period of time we brought in eight  people between midnight and 8 am. I just would say, historically, winter time  is when one has the greatest success bringing people off the streets, summer  time typically not. But with HOME-STAT we’ve been able to identify where people  are and we are going directly to try to reach those who are most vulnerable.  Some of these individuals went to shelters and some of them went to hospitals  because they needed medical care.Yes?Question: Last year there were 1,000 power outages on Staten  Island because of overhead lines are typically more vulnerable to the heat. Is  there anything that’s being this year that’s different to prevent that from  happening?Mayor: Joe? Carlos?Carlos Torres, Con Edison: What we do normally year after year is we take a  look at our performance from prior years and we take a look at our system and  we look to enhance. And in the Company last year we spent – last year and this  year we spent $1.6 billion enhancing our system. So, we’ve taken a look at that  overhead system and we’ve made modifications to it to prevent from happening  again.Question: Like what?Torres: Reinforcing the cables, looking at the substations  and reinforcing the equipment that – we have switches that we can operate to  better operate the system.Mayor: Questions related to heat and the weather. Let’s see  if there is anything – please. You may.Question: Is there any risk of coastal flooding at this point  or anything like that on the horizon?Commissioner Esposito: Well, the thunderstorms are really – it’s going to  affect the low-lying areas. This is not a high tide situation where the waves are  going to come in. This is more the thunderstorm, a lot of rain in a short  period of time. So, those areas that historically flood – parts of the FDR  Drive or things like that, that’s the areas that will most likely flood, not  the coastal areas. And again, we’ve dealt with DEP and Sanitation and they are  out there cleaning the catch basins trying to prevent some of that.Mayor: Okay. Anything else weather or heat related? Going  once, going twice, okay.Oh, I’m sorry – where?Question: Mr. Torres, do you expect record lows or do you  think we’re going to get away with it?Torres: I think we’re going to get away with it. I think,  based on our forecasted peak we’re nowhere near our forecasted peak, but we are  mobilized. It is part of part of our [inaudible]. And we’ve staged people –  we’re working 24 hours. We split our resources to have them ready to respond  because we want to be always in front of these things before they happen. And I  think we’re keeping up with everything that is happening.Mayor: But Rich I would say that also – again, better safe  than sorry for the whole city because what we’re talking about here is one  thing. If we had serious power outages it would be a much tougher situation.  So, I really want to emphasize to people to set that thermostat at 78. It is a  way of really making a difference and, you know, it is the kind of situation  that once something starts to go bad – as you know, we’ve all experienced it  before – it’s a huge problem to try to fix it after. But this is a situation  where people can stay safe, but also avoid the strain on the power system. We  think this is going to go only another day, but you never know. The weather has  its own ideas sometimes, so we want to be really mindful because with each passing  day it puts more and more strain on things.Okay, I want to just talk for  a moment very personally about the police-involved shootings in Louisiana and  Minnesota. I’m just like so many Americans – I’m just reeling from having to  watch these videos. And I just want to say it is an unacceptable state of  affairs. This is not what America is supposed to be and we are watching time  and time again and it is almost always a young man of color. We’re watching  this over and over again and it’s become another one of these horrible American  patterns that has to end.We will always wait for all  the facts to come out – that’s the right thing to do. And obviously, every day  we honor and respect everyone who is a part of law enforcement, but when you  look at those videos it begs the question: what kind of training did those  officers receive? What were they told about the way to do their job? Because  it’s not the right way. So, in this city we have a long way to go, but I really  want to emphasize: this city made a decision to retrain all of our police  officers and put a particular emphasis in the training for our new recruits  that we would focus on de-escalation approaches, we’d focus on really helping  them to communicate better with people in the community. It is making a  difference, but it is necessary all over the country. This should be a federal  priority that all of our officers get trained in de-escalation and how to work  better with communities. It’s obviously also a further example of why we need  body cameras. This city is moving aggressively to implement body cameras. This  has to be done all over the country because we just cannot have these  situations happening over and over. I think it sends a horrible, horrible  message to our young people about how this nation values them when we see this  kind of thing over and over. And my heart goes out to the families involved.  And you know, we all watch the video from Minnesota. I don’t know how that  woman had the composure. I don’t understand how anyone in that minute of crisis  – that moment of crisis could keep herself together the way she did, but she  did something very important for this nation by showing us what happened. And I  hope we will use this as finally an opportunity to take a step forward. Yes?Question: Mr. Mayor, on that note – seeing that video last  night and then again this morning does that make you stop and want to  accelerate the City’s body camera program? Is there anything that can be done  there?Mayor: I think the retraining is the simple most important  – single most important point. I really do. And that has obviously now reached  the entire force. And we can see already – you know, we haven’t talked a lot  about what the neighborhood policing program is changing and the presence of  the NCO’s at the community level, but I’m hearing all the time from community  people what a difference it is to know their officers, to have built the  relationship. So, I would argue even more than the body cameras the training  and the neighborhood policing orientation are the most important thing. But we  are moving aggressively on the cameras. There is no question that we’re going  to continue to find success with them. We, more than almost any other city,  have some of the biggest technological and logistical challenges we have to  overcome to get them to full implementation. But we’re moving, I think, at a  very good rate. Yes?Question: Mr. Mayor, you’ve talked in the past about how some  of what has to be addressed here are real huge institutional problems and the  retraining that has happened – how do you ensure that – what the officers take  away from that is reinforced? And that you continue to chip away at what we  keep seeing over and over again?Mayor:  This is why I really – I think what  Commissioner Bratton and Chief O’Neill have put in motion is going to deepen  and going to become an example for the country because it is so pervasive.  That’s the way you make change. The training is not one time only. You know,  we’re training our officers in de-escalation at the Academy, but we’re also  retraining to entire force and then there are refresher trainings that will be  annual. On top of that, we have implicit bias training now as part of our  curriculum. Now, again, we have to always wait for the facts, but when you look  at those two videos it is very hard to believe that bias was not a part of the  equation because of the level of overreaction. So, implicit bias training is  necessary. We are – you know, the glory of this country is we are the great  multi-ethnic, multi-cultural society, but that doesn’t mean we don’t have a lot  of history we have to overcome. And that kind of training goes right at it – it  helps people understand biases they didn’t even know they had, but that could  become deadly in the wrong situation. The final point is that the neighborhood  policing to me is the thing that glues it all together because – and we see it  over and over again – when officers get to know the communities they serve;  when the community members get to know the officers. It’s a whole different  reality. It humanizes everything. And, it leads to community members helping  officers. We’ve seen it time and time again. I’ve heard this from officers  directly as recently as out in Staten Island on Monday. I met an NCO who serves  on Staten Island who was telling me how community members seek him out with  information to help him. That’s what we want because it also helps that officer  to feel a deep connection to the people he is serving. And we want to see that  all over. So, that’s the direction we have to go in.Question: Speaking of New York City being the leader  nationwide in the retraining and like we’ve done with counterterrorism, this  retraining program — is it something that you would take the leadership role  and present to the federal authorities not just when asked, but taking a  leadership role to share this?Mayor: Absolutely. And look, more so Commissioner Bratton  who obviously has a national reputation for the reforms that he has achieved  over decades. I think he is the perfect person to help his colleagues around  the country understand the power of this approach. I think it has to be a  federal initiative though, meaning if we say to police departments, many of  which don’t have a lot of resources, we want you to do a very intensive and costly  training and there is no resources to go with it – it’s is a mixed message. So  I think we can help to provide a model – a model that is being proven under  very tough conditions. But I think if we are serious as a country, we have to  put resources into the retraining to help police forces to do it.Question:  New York City has received its fair share of criticism  for Eric Garner, Ramarley Graham, Akai Gurley. Do you think New York City is  different than the rest of the country when it comes to how police deal with  ––?Mayor: I think yes and I think there is a very important  chronology point in what you raised. Those were all horrible incidents that  should not have happened. On the other hand, as you know the history of each  one – they were before these full, new approaches. Both the neighborhood  policing and the NCO Program and the retraining of the entire force have been  achieved. I think you are going to see consistent improvement now that that is  the case. There is no question in my mind, when you retrain the entire police  force you are going to see tangible results. So, you know we have plenty of  problems in our past too. I am not trying to say New York City is perfect. I am  trying to say we have decided as a result in large measure of those tragedies to  change course. It all connects, whether it is the retraining of the entire  force and the implicit bias training, the NCO Program – the neighborhood  policing approach, obviously the reduction of Stop and Frisk. All of these  pieces connect and they are all now finally being fully felt. But they are as a  result of that history – it is because of that history that we have to make  those changes.Question: What would you say to New Yorkers who maybe are  concerned at this point – we are almost two years after Eric Garner’s death and  we haven’t seen any official action from the NYPD against the officer involved?  There are people who are certainly not happy with how things went with the  officers involved in Ramarley Graham’s death, what would you say?    Mayor: I’d say exactly as I’ve said before. First of all in  the case of Eric Garner, the Justice Department controls that situation right  now and as you saw in the last day, I think Louisiana handled it exactly right  by calling in the Justice Department immediately given that particular  situation. The Justice Department is the gold standard, has been the gold  standard. This goes back to the Civil Rights Movement and everything over the  last half century in this country. So while the Justice Department controls the  situation that’s appropriate and we yield to that. In the case of Ramarley  Graham, there will be a procedure, there is going to be due process and there’s  going to be an outcome. I’ve said that very, very clearly. That is going to  happen sooner rather than later. There are specific due process steps that have  to happen. And everyone is owed due process but there will be a resolution of  that.Question: Broadening this out a bit, the threshold for using  lethal force: we had an incident here in New York where there was an alleged  road-rage incident. An off-duty police officer shot and killed the alleged  assailant. I don’t even know whether the assailant was black or the police  officer was – but the circumstances of that case, you know, we have a person  who has been shot dead in what was basically a fist fight over traffic.Mayor: You know, Henry, I think first thing we have to  recognize is we don’t know what happened yet. We really don’t. It’s a very  different situation than an on-duty officer performing their role, but  nonetheless we all are concerned. We have to know what happened. We have to  know if the use of force was appropriate. But as you know now the State  Attorney General has taken over that investigation and this one, there are a  lot of questions about but that’s about everything that happened. So I don’t  want to pass judgement and I do want to emphasize it’s a different reality  because it’s not about an officer in the line of duty but, we will get the  results of that investigation. Yes?Question: Mr. Mayor, on a personal note, what was your reaction  as a parent to what happened in Louisiana and Minnesota?Mayor: My feelings are the same as they have always been. No  parent of color or parent of a child of color in this country can watch that  and not be afraid. It’s – you know, you fear for the life of a child when you  see a situation like this because it is inexplicable. And that’s the problem  here. Again, I have tremendous respect for law enforcement and I have  tremendous appreciation for the dangers they face. And we’ve tried very hard to  provide a lot more support for our officers to keep them safe including 2,000  more cops on the street. But, what the age of the cellphone video has done has  now made this very personal for all Americans. And you look at some of these  situations like ‘How could that be? How is it possible?’ And I was very pained;  this is certainly personal for me. You know – one of the family members of the  young man from Minnesota was talking about the fact that she always told him –  I don’t recall. I think it might have been his mother I just don’t recall – on  CNN this morning, it was his mother? She was telling him, saying on camera, ‘I  always told him do exactly what the officer says. Just follow their  instructions to the letter.’ And we have to see the facts but, if the facts are  as his girlfriend recounts; and he told the officer he had a weapon and a  permit to have that weapon; and he was communicating fully; and he ends up dead  – for parents that is a devastating example. Because we are telling our kids do  everything the officer says, and you will be safe.Question: What do you say to a lot of young people in  particular who feel like they can’t trust the system when they see incidents  like this?Mayor: I would tell them that when the biggest city in the  country has made the decision to retrain every single one of our officers and  to train them in implicit bias, which is a very powerful point. It’s an  acknowledgment of an American problem and a history of racism and other biases  that we have to overcome; I think that’s a cause for hope. I’d tell them that  neighborhood policing is a cause for hope. There’s thousands of times every day  where are officers come to the defense and the protection of young men of  color. I would tell them to remember that too. But I also have to acknowledge,  as a parent, the message that we are trying to get across is do exactly what  the officer says. And I hope officers all over the country that there are  parents of children of color every single day saying this every day, literally  the first things out of our mouths: do exactly what the officer says. But that  also has to be a message to our officers to recognize that every one of these  situations is being watched so closely. And we want our young people of color  to have faith that if they follow the instructions of a police officer that  they’ll come out okay. And so this one’s a very painful one.Question: Just a follow up to that Mr. Mayor, often in lots of  families and certainly I can speak to personal experience when something like  this happens you give a call to your father – or to your son and you talk about  it. Is this something that you’ve spoken about with Dante or even Chiara?Mayor: I haven’t this time but I’ve spoken with Dante and  Chiara about these kinds of situations many times before and I wish I hadn’t  had an occasion to speak about them many times before. That’s what is in part  spurring my comment. There was a day, I can’t identify it in history – there  was a day where a campus mass shooting became commonplace in this country. I  don’t want to see these kind of situations become commonplace where a young man  of color dies in this fashion and we think it’s just an everyday occurrence.  But no, I’ve had many opportunities to talk to him about it.Okay, anything else? Yes  please.Question: We have an off-topic –Mayor: Of course.Question: This is actually for Michael Kelly about the two  children who had fallen over the weekend: one in Harlem on Sunday where right  now it’s under investigation that the window guard may have fallen off with the  child, and then again in the Bronx on Tuesday evening. The child may have  climbed over though, that window guard. Can you give us an update on those  please?Michael Kelly, General  Manager of NYCHA: Well I was saddened  by the tragedy. It’s an ongoing investigation by the Police Department, a  recognition that NYCHA inspects window guards regularly as part of our annual  inspection process and this particular apartment was inspected last March.Question: Which one in the Bronx or Harlem?  Kelly: Well the Bronx is not a NYCHA facility, Harlem was.Mayor: March of 2016. And we also want to emphasize anybody  whether in public housing or anywhere – if your landlord is not providing a  window guard and you have small children you should call 3-1-1 immediately. And  please I ask all of you to help get that message out. If it’s NYCHA, we  obviously as the City have a responsibility to fix that situation immediately.  If it’s a private landlord, the law requires them to do it. We want to know  about it and we want to force their hand and get that fixed.Commissioner Bassett: That’s correct. The law requires that landlords put  window guards in any apartment where there’s a child under the age of 10 and if  anyone has a concern that their landlord hasn’t installed this they should call  3-1-1 and make a complaint. HPD enforces this and they will install window  guards if the landlord fails to do so and bill the landlord. Kelly: You know, just to add that if there are any NYCHA  residents who have any concerns at all about window guards that they’re to  contact the customer contact center at NYCHA. That’s 7-1-8-7-0-7-7-7-7-1.Mayor: Say that number again, I’m sorry.Kelly: 7-1-8-7-0-7-7-7-1.Question: Just to clarify, you said the NYPD is investigating,  but is there also a NYCHA investigation if in fact the window guard was  inspected in March and it fell off with this child?Kelly: We are looking at that, at the history of the  inspector, what the inspector did, and other inspection situations. In that  particular case again, it’s one in which it’s tragic. All the other window  guards in the apartment were bolted correctly, and it’s something that’s under  investigation right now.Mayor: Andrew?Question: Mayor, today Scott Stringer referred to the Campaign  for One New York as a ‘slush fund’. I’m wondering your reaction to that and  also to the Campaign Finance Board’s decision this week.Mayor: My reaction is he doesn’t know what he’s talking  about. We’ve been very clear – a fully disclosed effort to achieve pre-K for  all our children and affordable housing for half a million New Yorkers. And  fully disclosed, which is the thing that again, I think this is where the line  should be drawn. Any political activity where the sources of the funds are not  disclosed – watch out. When it’s fully disclosed and particularly if it’s trying  to achieve goals that are needed for the whole city like pre-K and affordable  housing. He’s just – he’s missing the point.Question: [inaudible] Campaign Finance Board including that no  law was broken but they’re still examining more recent payments because it’s  closer to your reelect.Mayor: Everything was done appropriately by law. I agree  with their assessment that no law was broken, and this was done appropriately.  Again, we always focused on disclosure. It’s one of the – I haven’t seen their  report, but I think they focus a lot on the importance of disclosure. We did  that voluntarily, and I thoroughly believe in that. But it’s quite clear from  their report that things were done appropriately.Marcia?Question: Mr. Mayor, to follow along with what [inaudible] has  been asked, the comptroller said that the standard should not be whether you  broke the law, the standard should be - what’s the best practice for conducting  political campaigns? But I have a two part question. Number one: your  reaction to the fact that the comptroller seems to be attacking you very  personally for the first time. And secondly, he released an audit today which  basically accuses you and Mayor de Blasio –Mayor: I am Mayor de Blasio.Question: I’m sorry, Mayor Bloomberg.Mayor: Unless I have a second identity I didn’t know about.  Oh my god.[Laughter]Question: Mayor Bloomberg of giving $60 million in tax breaks  to people who passed away or corporations that were controlled by people who may  have –Mayor: In defense of Mayor Bloomberg, he didn’t personally  give those tax breaks and nor did I. Look, it was a broken policy as you said  it predates us. We found it in fact. We’re going to fix it. Wherever  appropriate we’re going to work to get the money back, which won’t be easy but  we’re going to certainly work to do that. This was obviously something that was  not done right, and it’s our job to fix it. As to the comptroller’s personal or  political motivations, I’m not going to conjecture. He just has his facts  wrong.Question: Don’t you think it’s unusual for him to have a press  conference about tax breaks and then suddenly haul off at you about –Mayor: Again, I don’t spend time conjecturing about it.Question: What do you think of the governor’s actions to impose  the daycare rules that you had tried to stop? I guess successfully stopped in  the legislature, and also can you react to his statement that he’s not going to  let your political agenda put children in danger.Mayor: You know, my statement about the governor all along  has been when he helps New York City I will commend him and thank him, and when  he works against the interest of New York City I will challenge him. He’s  working against the interest of New York City on this one. The legislation  would’ve made it harder to appropriately serve our children. And we were  absolutely right to not allow a piece of legislation that would actually add  more bureaucracy and less ability to protect children. We have put in a whole  series of reforms to increase the number of inspections, to raise the  standards, we worked very productively with the legislature to report to the  public better on the status of each center and what they’ve done so parents  know, and that was a good example of the legislature working to help us figure  out a way to do something that was actually value added. But, you know, I think  the governor is just missing the point here. We actually here the ground have  to make sure our kids are safe, and we do it every day.In the back – all the way  back first – wait no, all the way back.Question: Mr. Mayor, where do you stand on the redevelopment of  [inaudible]?Mayor: I’ve supported it, and I’d love to see it move  forward. And you know it’s obviously been a public issue but as Deputy Mayor  Glen made very clear, we’re ready to work very cooperatively with the folks  involved in that project, and then, right after she said that they sued us,  which makes it a little hard to work cooperatively, but we still hope it can be  resolved.Question: Mr. Mayor, it was about a year ago that we were in  the peak of the attention being paid to the homeless crisis here in the city.  You did the overhaul and made some system changes, and yet the number of  homeless men and women in this city is still 30 percent higher than it was when  you first took office. So how do you say the city is doing at handling the  homeless population right now?Mayor: I want to check those numbers respectfully. My memory  is that the number in shelter was just about 50,000 when I took office. It’s  around 58,000 now. I’m not happy one bit that it’s 8,000 more. But I want to  give Steve and all the folks at HRA and DHS a lot of credit. For the last year  they have held that number pretty steady around 58,000. Look, it is 58,000 too  many – I’ll state the obvious. It’s really troubling to me as someone who was  working on these issues back 10 and 15 years ago, but the bottom line is for  the first time that number is stable. Remember the projection we showed you  guys a few months back – if we had not taken all the steps we had took on the  anti-eviction legal services, the subsidies, the LINC program, etcetera, that  number would probably be closer to 70,000 now. That would be a real crisis for  so many families and also the whole city. So I think the most important point  is the shelter population is finally stabilized. We have a plan for 15,000  supportive apartments. Bigger investments in affordable housing than we’ve ever  had. And remember – most folks are in shelter are for economic reasons and so  the affordable housing program is a really big part of the solution. And we  believe a day will come when we can turn that number for the long haul. But I  think those strategies that have at least begun to change. And then HOME-STAT,  which is beginning the change of getting people off the streets, and the fact  that we ended all the encampments, which is something that had not been done  over the previous 10 or 20 years. These show that change can happen but we got  a lot more to do. Steve you want to add?Commissioner Banks: I’d just add that, you know, as you noted Hazel, the  Mayor announced a major reform of the system in April. It’s now just the  beginning of July and the numbers really are the context in which those major  reforms were announced by the Mayor. In 1994 – January 1, 1994 – there were  24,000 men, women and children in the city’s shelter system. On January 1,  2002, there were 37,000 men women and children in the shelter system, and by  January 1, 2014 the number was heading towards 51,000. Our modeling projected  that if all the actions that have been taken hadn’t been taken, we’d be in the  coming fiscal year at 71,000. Look, as you know, as someone who’s worked with  homeless in the city for three decades – or three and a half decades – these  are reforms that we’ve been waiting for years that were laid out by the mayor  just about 11 or 12 weeks ago. But on the other hand this is reforming a  20-year-old system and we said at the time it won’t happen overnight but you  can already see the benefits that some clients have experienced. Other clients  the reforms hadn’t taken hold yet. The 24 percent drop in evictions, that’s  nearly 25,000 people, men, women and children who are in their homes instead of  in the shelter system. Or the 35,000 people that either didn’t enter the system  or weren’t moved out as a result of the rental assistance in the housing  strategies that the mayor put in place over the last year and a half and that  we’ve accelerated during the 90-day review. These are programs that are  benefitting real life, flesh-and-blood New Yorkers. The eight people that came  in off the streets last night, the 150 people who came off the streets during  the most recent month we have data for. All of this shows the approach of  taking a case-by-case approach rather than a one size fits all approach – the  one size fits all approach lead to that growth from 24,000 to 37,000 to more  than 50,000, and we’re not going to be satisfied until we continue to implement  these reforms and get the kinds of impact for all the men, women and children  in the shelter system or who may need shelter. This is all occurring of course  against a background of having lost 400,000 units of affordable housing over  the last decade; domestic violence, which is a major driver of people entering  the shelter system; and on any given night to the extent we may continue to use  for example, hotels. One would want us to rather than turn away a survivor of  domestic violence, or one would want us to rather than not pick up someone from  the street that we could. But make no mistake about it, when the mayor  announced these reforms in April, this is a major system change. It won’t  happen overnight but you can see the progress, and we’ve been pretty  transparent about that progress.Question:  Any particular reason why there are more and  more people becoming homeless or homeless here in this city –?Mayor: Yes, the economy. We’ve been over this before but I’m  happy to go over it again. It is the cost of housing. Everyone in this room can  talk about the cost of housing from personal experience. It’s unbelievable that  as we went into a recession and then had an aftermath that was not a recovery –  right? It was aftermath of the recession where more and more people fell into  poverty, and more and more people were suffering economically. The cost of  housing just kept shooting upward. It’s like a perfect storm. That’s why 40,000  plus of the folks in shelter are members of families with children. That’s not  what we used to have. We used to – a lot of people know this from your own  history of reporting – we used to have single males and single females and then  some families, but it was overwhelmingly singles – folks with mental health  issues, folks with substance abuse issues. The world had got turned on its head  as a result of the recession and the total lack of movement in wages and  benefits, and on top of that the massive increase in housing costs in the city.  It was like a perfect storm, so today’s homeless is more and more an economic  problem. But the good news in that is – a family with kids – a lot of whom for  example, a lot of the adults in that family are working, kids are going to  school – they don’t need supportive housing with all the services, they just  need housing they can afford. And when you get them housing they can afford  they’re back out on their own and they’re self-sufficient again, which is why  things like the LINC program have been such a big deal.That’s what we lost back in  2011 when the State and the City canceled Advantage and that’s another one of  the reasons things got so bad. So, I think it is very fair to say the fact is  that this kind of homelessness cuts even deeper into our society and more and  more people are susceptible. But on the other hand there are some ways that we  can solve it that are better than what we had in the past.Question: [Inaudible]Mayor: Yes.Question: I was wondering what you make of the NYCLU’s  criticism of that [inaudible] rights of equal access and you’re making an  exception to the Jewish community.Mayor: No, we are not. I am glad you asked it because I  really want to affirm. This was a very thoughtful conversation inside the  administration. And we are not repeating what existed previously because we  don’t think that was appropriate, meaning the dynamics on the ground were not  welcoming for all women. And we want a situation where we can acknowledge that  a limited amount of time that is women only has real merit, but it’s all women.  So, it doesn’t matter which community you come from, doesn’t matter if you  happen to be transgender, everyone is welcome in that time. And that is a  different imperative and one that we think makes sense. We’re also very clear  everyone must follow the rules. There is a set of rules about how you comport  yourself there and you respect everyone else who is there. And that has to be  followed. So, it is a different approach.Question: [Inaudible]Mayor: No, because in fact there are, as we said in some of  the materials we put out, there are women who feel more comfortable swimming  around women just because they feel that generally. There are folks who have  been the victims of domestic violence or have had other situations in their  life that make them feel safer in an environment that’s only women. We think it  is perfectly good public policy done in limited hours and where there is enough  demand. But I want to be crystal clear, it’s open to all women – anyone who  identifies themselves as a woman and that’s one standard for everyone.Question: The IBO put out a report today about property tax  assessments on Staten Island compared to other outer boroughs. And one of the  findings, which has always been pretty clear, is that Staten Island has a  higher property tax burden because of the way assessments are capped. And so,  if you live in a neighborhood like yours it depreciates faster and you have  lower bills. So, I was just curious what would you say to Staten Island homeowners  who have higher bills than you might have on your own homes in Brooklyn simply  because of where they live?Mayor: I’ve said this – you know, I have been at town hall  meetings all over the City including some neighborhoods where a lot of  homeowners had this concern. And I said we will undertake a bigger effort. It’s  going to take a lot of planning; it’s going to have to be done very, very  carefully for an overhaul of our property tax system. It’s going to be probably  years to achieve the goal, but right now there’s too many inconsistencies and  too many areas that aren’t transparent enough. So, we will do that in time. But  the most important thing – and I say this as a homeowner myself is – we have  committed ourselves in the administration to not increasing the property tax  rate. And since all homeowners know in the last 15 years in this City property  tax rates went up twice and that had a very big impact on homeowners. We’re  saying the whole way we do our budgeting is to avoid a property tax rate  increase. It has a very tangible impact on all homeowners. Obviously we’re  moving to change the water bills as well for homeowners and get them that  credit they deserve and stop taking the non-water cost out of the water bills.  We’re fighting that in court right now against our dear friends from the Rent  Stabilization Association –  the landlords who want to stop 660,000  homeowners from getting a credit on their water bill. So, we’re doing things to  lighten the burden of homeowners. But what you’re referring to is a real issue,  but it is going to take a citywide and very complicated solution.Question: A follow-up – you’re saying that this is going to  take a long time to fix, but you’ve made no movement to actually like fix it  other than –Mayor: I have been very clear we’re going to, but it is  going to be a very big endeavor. We just have not been able to put it together  yet, but we will.Question: Will you take another question about the shootings?Mayor: Yeah.Question: I’m wondering if you’ve had the opportunity or when  you have the opportunity to talk to your children, what will you say to them?  How will you discuss it with them? And what do you expect their response will  be?Mayor: I think they’re going to be very pained and my  response is going to be that, you know, we have to make change and change can  happen. And again, in this city we’re showing that it’s beginning to happen.  But I would also say the same thing – as horrible as the message that comes out  of that Minnesota incident is – I would still affirm: do exactly what the  officer says. I would say – of course, because as painful as it is, it’s still  the right thing to do and it is the safe thing to do. So, what I’m saying to  you honestly is I’m so troubled because I think for a lot of kids they’re going  to be doubting that advice. A lot of kids wonder about their parents’ advice,  and now I’m sure there’s going to be conversations all over America tonight –  ‘You told me this, and now look what happened.’ But it is still the right advice,  do exactly what the officer says.Yes, Gloria?Question: I wanted to ask you and Commissioner Banks if you  could also comment on this – HRA on the Rivington situation – HRA had reached  out to Village Care in January of 2015 to talk about possible other uses for  that facility. I was wondering if you were aware that the agency had an  interest in that property.Mayor: You know that – as you know, the whole issue there  is under investigation and in terms of any of the details or the tick tock the  investigation will yield, I think, a rendition of what happened. That will  clarify everything, so I don’t want to talk to any of those kinds of chronology  issues. Let’s let the investigation run its course.Yes?Question: Donald Trump gave an interview to the New York Post  where he spoke at length about you. He called you “One of the most incompetent  men.” And then he also seems to be very upset that you did not thank him for  finishing the golf course in the Bronx.[Laughter]Mayor: His ego needs are outstanding.Question: “I saved the city’s ass. I never got a phone call.”  So, do you think you committed an etiquette faux-pas there?Mayor: No, no. I didn’t think that golf course was such a  good idea to begin with. The – Donald Trump is losing credibility by the day.  And he’s a guy who has run a campaign based on racism – it’s the most racially  divisive campaign since George Wallace in 1968. You know, I guess I should be  honored to be attacked by someone like that but he doesn’t know what he is  talking about. He certainly doesn’t understand what’s happening in New York  City. And I think there are more and more people in this country that just are  ignoring him at this point.Yes, Henry?Question: I want to go back to the CFB opinion. They cited  three issues – the amounts of your donations [inaudible], who donated – people  who have business with the City, people who have issues before the City, and  who received the money --- people who were very active in your political  campaign. And they said all of these factors create a risk to you – a political  risk that you appear to be into a pay-for-play mode and that you’re creating an  appearance of impropriety. How do you take those assertions? I mean, do you  think that maybe it was a mistake to create this committee in the way it was  created? Mayor: No. I’ll do the quick rendition again and then I  just want to give you a bigger point. As we said, we sought guidance every step  of the way, which is what we wish people in public life would do – go to the  appropriate ethics boards and seek guidance. We disclosed everything, which is  what we would like to see everyone do in public life. Does not happen in this  city, state, and nation on the regular basis, but we did it voluntarily. And  what was the cause we were fighting for? First it was pre-K, then it was  affordable housing. Now, you know there’s a whole lot of money in politics in  this country that goes to back up the interest of big business and the wealthy  and the powerful. We were trying to help children and people who needed  affordable housing. So, I feel very comfortable with that choice. The bigger  point is when you’re not talking about electoral campaign – and I think it is a  very important distinction. Again, I have not read the report, but from what I  have heard at least I’m not sure this distinction was made clearly enough. In  an electoral campaign in this city we have some of the best campaign finance  laws in the country. I commend them. I think they are a model. And I have not  only lived by them, I think it is one of the reasons why I am here. But if  you’re talking about issues in the post Citizens United world – so, I gave you  my latest number was $11 million in advertising against me by landlords, by a  major multi-national corporation, by hedge fund managers. There are no rules  for those guys. There are no limits; there are no disclosure requirements. We  have to work to achieve specific changes and this still has to be seen in the  context of unilateral [inaudible]. So, one sector of our society – the wealthy  – have no limits on them whatsoever. I’m giving you very specific examples –  hedge fund managers, multi-national corporations, and the landlord lobby – $11  million between them. [Inaudible] when those guys have no rules and no limits  and someone like me is fighting for a series of changes [inaudible]. So, I  understand that and I respect the report and the issues it’s raising.  [Inaudible] not an electoral campaign. This is about issues that have to be  resolved. Are we only going to allow one side of the equation [inaudible]  playing field? Is that the aspiration here as a result of Citizens United? So,  the answer in my opinion – let’s go the distance. Let’s get money out of the  whole godforsaken system. Let’s repeal Citizens United and I would like to ban  all of those interests from being able to advertise and none of us will  advertise and then everything would go through you guys, which I think would be  great. Let’s have that debate in the public domain with a level playing field,  but we don’t have that.Question: They say as Mayor of the biggest city in the country  you have a bully pulpit that [inaudible].Mayor: I’m rolling my eyes.Question: You mentioned the figure $11 million.Mayor: I have to stop you at the first point. I’m sorry, if  anyone wants to analyze how information travels in our society, paid media has  a particular impact. There is no amount of [inaudible] in the world that can  compensate for. So, I’m just – I think that is a fair statement. I’m putting  aside the peculiar case of Donald Trump. With normal people, in normal  political discourse and there’s more research than you can shake a stick at –  paid media plays a particular role; and so, to say the bully pulpit versus  nonstop advertising, no.Question: [Inaudible]Mayor: Henry [inaudible] defies common sense. In a  campaign, all sides are limited in what they can spend fairly and equally and  then the minute we start talking about issues one side of the equation – the  wealthy – can spend all they want and the rest of us are supposed to do  nothing. That’s what defies common sense.Josh, you have the final  word.Question: [Inaudible]Mayor: I would say a six month delay needs to be put in  historic perspective. We said for juveniles we will end it – we ended it. We’ve  been moving aggressively to end it for the next group, the 19-21 year olds, but  we have to put some additional steps in place to make that work as well as we  want to because as you know, Commissioner Ponte – and I want to say  Commissioner Ponte, history is smiling on Joe Ponte right now because he has  shown in the parts of Rikers where his model is fully taking hold, the reduction  in violence is striking. And it’s a long, difficult process, but it is really  starting to work. But the ground work has to be in place. The things we’re  emphasizing that reduce violence and create order have been laid in place, but  more has to be done for us to feel 100 percent ready to make that next big  move. But it will be done. And I think there is an understanding by a lot of  the folks who care deeply about this issue that this is just putting some final  pieces in place and then continuing with our commitment. We decided this  proactively. We believe this was the right policy, and we’re going to get it  done.Thank you, everyone.

日期:2022/01/21点击:13